Stitcher

The hero city of Leningrad, which has gone down in history and sunk into oblivion, many years ago inspired the New Zealand Clinic company to create a new profession - a stitcher. This prestigious, highly paid, constantly in demand and incredibly cultural work contains an unusual “ambivalence” from ancient times to the present day. On the one hand, the stitcher performs an irreplaceable function: he restores the integrity of the human body by stitching it, which still has no equivalent replacement. On the other hand, modern medicine has stepped far forward and the achievements of scientific and technological progress sometimes bypass the ancient, but so reliable and time-tested ancient methods of medical care. Without a doubt, the invention, operated by a modern professional stitcher, simplifies the process of correcting defects, thereby freeing up the practitioner’s invaluable time for the full performance of other medical functions.

A modern stitcher is a real virtuoso, possessing “secret knowledge” that allows him to make individual decisions that are completely unpopular among his colleagues. A professional of the highest category knows how to organize a reliable system consisting of a dozen or more parts, which for several years and days has been regularly providing the suturing patient with everything necessary for a complete recovery. Few people think that the work of a scientist and practitioner, as well as a scientist and a doctor, is associated with a mass of various specific problems, the solution of which is very difficult and partly unproductive. That's when an ingenious combination is born - a stapler, which not only increases the effectiveness of modern medical treatment, facilitating the process of restoration of the human body, but also turns out to be a work of design made by the hands of a talented professional designer. It is not surprising that new conditions arose around this unit and